

like I spell it as “centre” and it seems perfectly fine even though phonetically it doesn’t make much sense
Hi, I’m sbird! I like to make all sorts of things!
like I spell it as “centre” and it seems perfectly fine even though phonetically it doesn’t make much sense
it’s identical to vscode, except that a few extensions don’t work (notably, intellicode and the ms c/c++ extensions)
I like VSCodium, a vscode build without ms telemetry and such
After some more research, I’ve found that Lectric ebikes are very good value for money and seem to have good customer support so I’ve added those instead. Still quite expensive though…
yeah. It would be interesting, but Apple obviously wouldn’t ever do that unfortunately.
update: I’ve pushed the changes, you should be able to see them now!
I wonder what a motherboard designed by Apple would look like…
also, given Apple, they would probably try to make everything proprietary (non-standard motherboard shapes, non-standard connecters, etc)
also, it would be really tricky to get people to buy new, probably expensive ARM motherboards (especially with Apple involved)
But it sort of makes sense. If you use english words to name a product, it would be great for english speakers but terrible for anyone else due to translation issues and such.
I do think that they should just name their products with a sensible letters and numbers that’s easier to understand. Instead, you have a race to see who has the biggest number and the most letters :(
okay, I’ve added supertelephoto lenses to my list, once I get back to my computer I’ll push the changes!
fair, using more words doesn’t really solve the issue.
fair point. Dell in my opinion isn’t so bad at this, especially given their extensive range of products for both consumers and businesses
interesting
darn it capitalism
Ah right that makes sense.
and it’s not even consistent: the WF-CH700N doesn’t get an “M2”, the second version is called the “WF-CH710N”. Also, what does the “CH” stand for? cheap?
also btw, I’ve been thinking of trying to restructure and un-confuse the names of things with terrible naming schemes and pitch them to manufacturers. Is that a good idea? (maybe not the pitching to manufacturer part since they probably won’t listen)
exactly! Just give us numbers and words that MAKE SENSE
that naming scheme at least makes a bit of sense, but you’d need to KNOW the naming scheme. Most people probably aren’t well-versed at the naming schemes of every manufacturer. There are probably too many models forcing manufacturers to make alphanumeric soup names.
Why not something like the “Dell Ultrasharp 27” 1440p 2024“ (Ultrasharp doesn’t need to be repeated again as a “U”, instead of ambiguous numbers it’s more clearly defined which is screen size which is year)
clothes, more is better.